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Meaning of Induration | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B2
ɪndjʊˈɹeɪʃən

Definitions

  1. Hardness.
  2. An enduring presence; fixity.
  3. The process of becoming hard.
  4. A hardening of an area of the body as a reaction to inflammation, hyperemia, or neoplastic infiltration.
  5. An area or part of the body that has undergone such a reaction.
  6. The quality of nonfriability; the extent to which a rock does not crumble; rock strength.
  7. The process of the strengthening of rocks by heating, compaction or cementation, or a combination thereof.

Equivalents

العربية التصلّب
Français induration
Polski stwardnienie

Examples

“The voice was harder than I had known, and not only in stony reaction to long floods of wholly just selfpity, also roughened with gin and smoke, perhaps also assimilated to New York induration, the hardness of culture as well as of pain.”
“Even the putatively innocuous whimsical shapes and designs of cakes and pastry, notably in Central Europe, retain to this day the phallic concept, the cryptic induration of the aphrodisiac function.”
“Both erythema and induration appear to be adequate indices of tuberculin sensitivity.”
“The erythema had spread to 20 cm, and the central induration had spread to 9 cm.”
“"Induration is a measure of rock "strength" and is defined as the ratio of the measured frame modulus to the maximum frame modulus allowed by the Gassmann-Biot model." Spratt, R. S.; Goins, N. R. and Fitch, T. J. (1993) "Pseudo-shear — The analysis of AVO." Castagna, John P. and Backus, Milo M. (eds.) Offset-Dependent Reflectivity — Theory and Practice of AVO Analysis. Series: Investigation in Geophysics volume 8. Tulsa : Society of Exploration Geophysicistspp. 37-56, page 37, isbn 978-1-56080-059-0.”
“"Induration of carbonate rocks proceeds predominately in the early stages (prior to diagenesis) by compaction and expulsion of fluids." Whittaker, Alun (1985) Formation Evaluation: Geological Procedures Dordrecht : Springer Verlag page 104, isbn 978-94-010-8861-9.”
“"At a given degree of induration, massive rocks of sandstone, siltstone, and limestone are the strongest, while shaly rocks with more or less parallel, closely spaced separation surfaces created during sedimentation in thin layers are the weakest." Committee on Underground Coal Mine Safety (1982) Toward Safer Underground Coal Mines Washington, D.C. : National Academy Press, page 32, isbn 978-0-309-03298-8.”

CEFR level

B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
See all B2 English words →

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